Documents reveal trouble for Justice

E-mails show officials considered political credentials for prosecutors

E-mails show officials considered political credentials for prosecutors

April 14, 2007

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Justice Department weighed political activism and membership in a conservative law group in evaluating the nation's federal prosecutors, documents released in the probe of fired U.S. attorneys show. The political credentials were listed on a chart of 124 U.S. attorneys nominated since 2001, a document that could bolster Democrats' claims that the traditionally independent Justice Department has become more partisan during the Bush administration. The chart was included in documents released Friday by the department to congressional panels investigating whether the firings last year of the U.S. attorneys were politically motivated - an inquiry that has Attorney General Alberto Gonzales fighting for his own job. ''This is the chart that the AG requested,'' Monica Goodling, Justice's former liaison to the White House, wrote in a Feb. 12 e-mail to two other senior department officials. ''I'll show it to him on the plane tomorrow, if he's interested.'' Goodling resigned last week, refusing to testify to Congress about her role in the firings and citing her constitutional protection against self-incrimination. The 2,394 pages of e-mails, schedules and memos released Friday included a few hand-scribbled pages of notes of reasons why some of the eight were ousted - notes that Justice officials confirmed were written by Goodling. Under Iglesias' name, Goodling wrote: ''Domenici says he doesn't move cases'' - a reference to Sen. Pete Domenici, the six-term Republican from New Mexico accused of pressuring the prosecutor on a political corruption investigation. That allegation has been one of the factors driving Democrats' claims that the firings were politically motivated. The documents also included indications that senior department officials had replacements in mind for the outgoing prosecutors nearly a year before the ousters, seemingly contradicting testimony last month by Gonzales' former top aide. The new batch of documents - adding to more than 3,400 previously released - came amid questions about missing White House e-mails, including some from presidential counselor Karl Rove and other administration officials. The Democratic-controlled Congress is seeking those e-mails as evidence for its inquiry into the firings. Private attorney Robert Luskin denied that Rove intentionally deleted his own e-mails from a Republican-sponsored computer system. He said President Bush's political adviser believed the communications were being preserved in accordance with the law. Democrats are questioning whether any White House officials purposely sent e-mails about official business on the RNC server - then deleted them, in violation of the law - to avoid scrutiny. White House officials said the administration is making an aggressive effort to recover anything that was lost. ''We have no indications that there was improper intent when using these RNC e-mails,'' spokeswoman Dana Perino said. The new documents also show Justice efforts to tamp down the controversy by meeting with congressional aides they considered potentially sympathetic to their viewpoint - including a staffer to Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., who has been one of Gonzales' most vocal critics. Additionally, the documents include correspondence from some prosecutors complaining about being ensnared in the political storm. The chart underscores the weight that conservative credentials carried with the Justice Department. The three-page spreadsheet notes the ''political experience'' of each prosecutor, which was defined as work at the Justice Department's headquarters in Washington, on Capitol Hill, for state or local officials, and on campaigns or for political parties. Several of the 124 prosecutors on the list were also members of the Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies. The group was founded by conservative law students and now claims 35,000 members, including prominent members of the Bush administration, the federal judiciary and Congress.